Title: Crafting a research paper or report
1Crafting a research paper or report
Technical writing Tips of the masters By Ronan
Fitzpatrick School of Computing Dublin Institute
of Technology November 2003
2References for this presentation
- DT266 Final year diploma project guide - DIT
- Final year degree project guide DIT
- Crafting a research paper by Fitzpatrick and
ODonnell - Report Writing Handout by Jane Ferris
3Structure
- Cover page and project title
- Page margins
- Line spacing - 1½
- Font size 12-point, 14-point, 16-point
- Section headings/Section numbering
- Page header - Chapter title
- Page footer - Page number, page 1 starts Chapter
1 - Justified text.
4Structure
- Abstract, Acknowledgements, List of figures,
Table of contents - Chapter 1 - Introduction to project
- Chapter 2 - Research chapter(s)
- Chapter 3 -
- Chapter 4 -
- Chapter 5 -
- Chapter Z - Conclusion
- Glossary of terms
- References or Bibliography
- Appendix
- Project code.
5Abstract
- This is an overview of the project, which is
intended to convince others that the content is
significant. It sells your work, so, weave the
keywords of your text into a summary of about 200
words. - First thing to be read, last thing to be written.
6Chapter 1- Introduction to project
- What the project is about?
- Why are you doing it?
- Who are you doing the project for?
- What value will it have for them?
- What is the challenge (problem) of the project?
- How will your solution differ from existing
solutions? - Who else will the project be of interest to?
- What value will it have for them?
- How do you plan to do it?
- What do you hope to deliver at the end of the
project? - What will the timescale be?
- What will you gain as a result of doing this
project?
7Chapter 1- Introduction to project
- Any experimental or prototype work you have done
to date - What you need to learn in order to complete your
project - Details of any special hardware or software you
need to complete the project - Any technical feasibility, financial feasibility
or temporal feasibility issues - State what your project will NOT do
- Include the titles of your remaining chapters.
- This will become Chapter 1 of your manual or
report so, format it as per the "Crafting a
research paper" guidelines. You'll probably
discover that this chapter runs to about 10-15
pages.
8Chapters development project
- Research chapter(s) about your core topic
- Chapter explaining what methodology you will use
and why. - Chapter titles should reflect methodology life
cycle phases for your project - Structured system, soft system, object oriented
- Include lots of appropriate graphical
representations - Reflect technical manual and user manual
- And, dont forget testing and evaluation.
9Chapters research project
- Research chapters
- Chapter with your contribution to the body of
knowledge your deliverable(s) - Evaluation of your deliverable.
10Chapter structure
- Overview paragraph (un-numbered)
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Body of Chapter
- 5.2.1 Definitions
- 5.2.2
- 5.2.3
- 5.x Conclusion.
Always start a chapter on a new page.
11Three pronged strategy
Research
Code
Report
Presentation
12Chapter Z - Conclusion
- Two aspects
- Summary of what the research has achieved
- Objectives, deliverables, your creation
- Deductions that can be made from the research
- Findings, critique
- Future research
- What you havent been able to address in the time
allowed but where future students might continue
from here.
13Citation and Reference
- Plagiarism
- Emphasises research and not opinion
- Research implies repeatable, so, source can be
found by others - Make a statement, cite a source
- Based on Harvard style
- References or bibliography.
14SAP
- Scholarly - Learned and academic, evidence of
educated research, instructive and clearly
explained (W6H), formal in language - Authoritative - Honest, accurate and true,
respected, convincing - Professional proficient, practiced, consistent,
oozing quality.
15Authoritative writing style
- Do
- Write in the passive voice (e.g., the research
was completed) - Write gender-free text (use the plural)
- Include examples in order to clarify topics for
your readers - Be consistent with bulleted lists, numbered
lists, figure and table captions - Be consistent with the spelling of new technical
words - For example, end-user, eCommerce, Internet
- Keep your sentences to under twenty-two words
- Proof-read your work for tryping errurs
- Re-read your work for structure, meaning and
clarity.
16Authoritative writing style
- Dont
- Dont use words like, etc., one or ones,
basically, essentially - Dont write this chapter will attempt to
(Write this chapter will) - Dont write As already stated... (Write in
Section X.Y it was explained) - Dont confuse its with its, or there, theyre,
their - Dont rely only on a spellchecker
- Dont include clipart unless it is significant to
your report.
17Professional
- References Without references your project is
not research. It is probably closer to
journalism or simply your own opinion. Cite
references in the text as (Bloggs, 1997) and in
the Bibliography give the full reference i.e.,
Surname, Initial, (year in brackets) Title,
Publisher, City, Country, Vol (Issue), Page Nos. - Language Write using best English vocabulary,
grammar, syntax and semantics in properly
structured paragraphs. Avoid slang and
colloquialisms. Remember to write text at a
level appropriate to your readers.
18Professional
- Style - Use a consistent style for page
formatting, page headers, footers, headings at
level 1, level 2 and level 3, bulleted and
numbered lists. - Illustrations Figures and Tables are essential
aids for your readers so, us a consistent format
for presenting them - Border, reference number, caption, different
font, bold titles - Refer to them in the text
- Explain then to your readers.
19Some more Dos and Donts
- Do lots of referencing
- Avoid use of personal pronouns I, you
- Avoid use of dialogue as per a TV program,
- Welcome to this report
- "In a few moments I will explain"
- Do some self critique
- Indicate how the research can be improved.
20Some more Dos
- Report project interviews
- State interviewees name, date, place
- List the questions and answers
- Project code listing
- Include clear, easily maintained code listing
- not just an entire dump of all code at the end
- Provide a list of files at the beginning.
- Look at past manuals in the library.
21Some more Dos and Donts
- Dont waffle PLEASE!! Be concise and to the
point. Only include relevant information. - Use appendices for extra information that will be
useful to the reader but has no direct impact on
the project (but don't overdo it either). - Get a number of people to proof read you manual.
When its your work and you proof-read it
yourself, you only see what you THINK you wrote. - Structure, structure, structure. The manual
should 'flow. - Don't have gaps of whitespace.
- No smart or joking comments. This is an academic
thesis.
22Some more Dos and Donts
- Readers should be able to get a clear idea of
what your project is about by comparing the
Abstract and Conclusion - As you are writing, have one word in the back of
your head 'Why'. Why did you choose one thing
over another, why do you have to write what
you're writing, why is this bit of information
important for my reader. - Don't overuse the person 'I did this and then I
did that and I think because I found....'. Use a
mixture of passive but also first person - Do read research papers (which you should be
doing anyway) to get a feel of what your writing
should 'sound' like.
23Most important Do and Dont
- Do yourself justice and Dont boast.